Preparing
for Practice Page 3: Street Smarts
Nuts and Bolts
"What should law schools
be doing to better equip new lawyers for practice? I think it goes
beyond getting across the point that law is a business. It's getting
young lawyers to focus on their choices and the implications of
their choices. That's something we struggle with, and we haven't
solved it yet."
– Kenneth B. Davis
Jr., dean, U.W. Law School
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Law schools everywhere hear demands that they provide more practical
training for students. As one example, the U.W.'s Assessment 2000 survey
found that 40 percent of responding employers and recent graduates suggested
making the curriculum "more practical." Some observers would advocate
more hands-on courses and clinicals in law school. But such programs are
more expensive to run than regular classes, law school administrators
point out. Fordham's Dean Feerick notes that clinicals, for example, require
a ratio of eight or nine students to one full-time faculty member.
Also surfacing in discussions of practical education is disagreement
about what's "practical" enough. For instance, is it the law school's
job to teach students about the business and economic aspects of law practice,
or is that part of on-the-job training? Evidence of that debate crops
up in the quotes from the 1950s noted earlier, and it's still an issue
today. From a national perspective, practitioners and academics are at
an impasse. "The academics argue they're not trade schools and that the
practicing bar should teach this," Yu says. "The practicing bar says it's
far more efficient for students to get that grounding in law school because
it can be taught in a mass education way, rather than each firm doing
it."
Beyond business savvy, young lawyers need "more nuts and bolts," says
Milwaukee attorney Tristan Pettit, immediate past-president of the State
Bar Young Lawyers Division and a 1995 Marquette graduate. "I'm talking
about such things as how you serve somebody who's dodging service," he
says, "or how you collect a retainer from a client - basic stuff that,
ideally, young lawyers should learn from their law firms. But unfortunately,
many firms aren't taking the time to teach that. So I think law schools
have to do it."
But time is also short in law schools, which already have much to teach
in only three years. Cagle, for instance, tries to cover many of those
nuts-and-bolts topics in his general practice skills course. But there's
a limit to what he can cover, and not all students need to learn the same
details. He believes students are better served by learning broader skills.
"I think if you teach people how to communicate with others and how to
solve problems," he contends, "then they will figure out how to collect
from a client or deal with other problems when they arise."
Agreement on how to handle practical legal training isn't likely to
emerge anytime soon. Entering into this discussion is the subject of mentoring,
or lack of it. On-the-job guidance for new lawyers has fallen victim to
the time and economic pressures of modern practice. In his first job out
of law school, Pettit not only received no mentoring, "I couldn't even
talk to a partner," he says. "He was never available. When you have that
one big question and you can't get in to talk to the partner, then everything
you learned in law school doesn't matter at that point. You're stuck,
and then you mess up." Frustration built to the point that Pettit almost
dropped out of law altogether. Fortunately, his father, also a lawyer,
was able to reassure him that not all practice settings were like his
son's first one.
Not all new attorneys face as severe a sink-or-swim environment as Pettit
did. But he's certainly not alone among young lawyers who have considered
leaving law, or actually did leave, because of poor or nonexistent on-the-job
training and guidance. Meanwhile, all this comes back to haunt law schools,
as legal employers demand that law graduates be ready to practice, and
new attorneys feel left in the lurch.
Preparing
for Practice Page 5: Realistic Expectations
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